05 May, 2010

Ellora Festival

It is a festival of dance and music held in the splendid surroundings of the world-heritage listed cave temple of Ellora, about 30 km from Aurangabad, Maharashtra. There are 34 caves cut out of the sloping side of the Chamadri hills. Excavated between 600-1000 AD, the caves belong to Buddhists, Jain and Hindu faiths.

Ellora represents some 300 years of experiments carried out by different faiths with their very different iconography and structural compulsions.

The archaeological Survey of India has discovered another 28 caves later. The masterpiece of Ellora is the Kailash Temple. It is the world's largest monolithic sculpture, sculpted out of a rock by 7000 labourers over a 150-year period.

This festival showcases the best talents and is a unique and charming way to experience the magnificent caves, imbibing centuries of history and culture. This Festival is organised by Maharashtra Tourism Development Corporation (MTDC) where India's renowned artists perform their talents in music and dance with the caves forming a splendid backdrop.


 

Kalidas Festival

Every year in the month of November the popular Kalidas Festival is celebrated at Nagpur to memorize the great Sanskrit poet Kalidas and his fabulous work in the field of poetry. The two days - nights fun filled musical and dance extravaganza is organized by Maharashtra Tourism Development Corporation (MTDC) and Collector Office of Nagpur, in association with Nagpur Municipal Corporation.

Every year in the month of November the popular Kalidas Festival is celebrated at Nagpur to memorize the great Sanskrit poet Kalidas and his fabulous work in the field of poetry. The two days - nights fun filled musical and dance extravaganza is organized by Maharashtra Tourism Development Corporation (MTDC) and Collector Office of Nagpur, in association with Nagpur Municipal Corporation.

The festival aims to recall the golden period of Vidarbha region. The celebration of Kalidas Festival is a tribute to Kalidas and his eternal contribution to the field of poetry.

The Kalidas festival is packed with stupendous performances of some of the most recognized artists in the field of dance, music and drama, celebrating the rich heritage of the serene Ramtek town. There are also luminous performances by theatre artists to further add enthuses to the festival. Kalidas Festival also endeavors to promote the Vidarbha region and its rich legacy throughout India and world wide.


Mother's Day




A Celebration In Honor of All Mothers

... is for the million things she gave me,
... means only that she's growing old,
 ... is for the tears she shed to save me,
... is for her heart of purest gold;
... is for her eyes, with love-light shining,
... means right, and right she'll always be.
Mother's Day is a time of commemoration and celebration for Mom. It is a time of breakfast in bed, family gatherings, and crayon scribbled "I Love You".


This song by Indian singer, Kailash Kher, is dedicated to all Mothers of the World! Beautiful Song - 'I Love You Mom'!
 



History

The first celebrations in honour of mothers were held in the spring in ancient Greece. They paid tribute to Rhea, the Mother of the Gods. During the 17th century, England honored mothers on "Mothering Sunday," celebrated on the fourth Sunday of Lent.

In the United States, Julia Ward Howe suggested the idea of Mother's Day in 1872. Howe, who wrote the words to the Battle Hymn of the Republic, saw Mother's Day as being dedicated to peace.

Anna Jarvis of Philadelphia is credited with bringing about the official observance of Mother's Day. Her campaign to establish such a holiday began as a remembrance of her mother, who died in 1905 and who had, in the late 19th century, tried to establish "Mother's Friendship Days" as a way to heal the scars of the Civil War.

Two years after her mother died, Jarvis held a ceremony in Grafton, W. Va., to honor her. She was so moved by the proceedings that she began a massive campaign to adopt a formal holiday honoring mothers. In 1910, West Virginia became the first state to recognize Mother's Day. A year later, nearly every state officially marked the day. In 1914, President Woodrow Wilson officially proclaimed Mother's Day as a national holiday to be held on the second Sunday of May.

But Jarvis' accomplishment soon turned bitter for her. Enraged by the commercialisation of the holiday, she filed a lawsuit to stop a 1923 Mother's Day festival and was even arrested for disturbing the peace at a war mothers' convention where women sold white carnations -- Jarvis' symbol for mothers -- to raise money. "This is not what I intended," Jarvis said. "I wanted it to be a day of sentiment, not profit!"

When she died in 1948, at age 84, Jarvis had become a woman of great ironies. Never a mother herself, her maternal fortune dissipated by her efforts to stop the commercialisation of the holiday she had founded, Jarvis told a reporter shortly before her death that she was sorry she had ever started Mother's Day. She spoke these words in a nursing home where every Mother's Day her room had been filled with cards from all over the world.

Today, because and despite Jarvis' efforts, many celebrations of Mother's Days are held throughout the world. Although they do not all fall at the same time, such countries as Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia and Belgium also celebrate Mother's Day on the same day as the United States.

Basic Facts And Beginnings:

The second Sunday in May is observed as Mother's Day in most countries of the world. But it was not always so. Not very long ago, a festival called 'Mothering Sunday' or 'Mid-Lent Sunday' was celebrated in England on the fourth Sunday in Lent. The celebrations were surprisingly similar to the modern way of celebrating Mother's Day.

The First Mother's Day, as we know it now days, was observed on May 10, 1908, in a church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The celebrations involved a church service in honor of Mrs. Anna Reese Jarvis, mother of Anna Jarvis.

Four years later, the Mother's Day International Association was created, on December 12, 1912, to spread the concept and practice of observing Mother's Day. The very next year, in May 1913, the House of Representatives of the US government adopted a resolution requesting the President, his Cabinet, members of Congress, and all officials of the federal government to wear a white carnation on Mother's Day.

And finally, on May 8, 1914, the Congress passed a Joint Resolution designating the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day.

Mother's Day In India

The practice of celebrating the Mother is not alien to India. For thousands of years Hindus have been celebrating a ten-day festival, Durga Puja, honouring the divine mother Durga, in early October. But the more personal festival of 'Mother's Day' has also come to become a part of our culture now. What it offers is an opportunity to honor and show our appreciation for our flesh and blood mother - the one person who has stood by us through thick and thin.

Hindu scripture credits the Great Mother, Kali Ma, with the invention of writing through alphabets, pictographs and beautiful sacred images.

Buddha honoured mothers when he said, "As a mother, even at the risk of her own life, loves and protects her child, so let a man cultivate love without measure toward the whole world."

In India there is a ten-day festival known as Durga Puja, which is held in early October. The festival honors Durga, the "Divine Mother". She is the most important of all Hindu goddesses.

However, in India, Mother's Day is observed mostly in cities, where people are more in contact with cultural traditions of the rest of the world.

What You Can Do On Mother's Day !

Given below are a few tips to express your love and appreciation for your mother-

- Visit or call your mother and surprise her by telling her you still remember how she used to care for you.

- Remember to illustrate your point with reminiscences of your childhood.

- Send her a card or flowers with a poem specially written for her (never mind if it is not perfect).

- Take her out to dinner or cook for her.

- Take her out for a dance, and tell her she is your first girlfriend and the first woman in your life.

- Wear a red carnation with a smile.

- Surprise her by making breakfast this Sunday.

- Think of any one woman, other than your own mother, who has been a mother figure to you, and surprise her by visiting her with a box of chocolates.

Significance of Carnations

When the first Mother's Day was observed at the request of Anna Jarvis in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on May 10, 1908, carnations were supplied at the church service. This was because carnations were her mother's favorite flowers.

Thereafter, carnations have come to be associated with Mother's Day. White carnations are supposed to represented purity and love. Now it has become a tradition to regard red carnations as a symbol of a living mother; white carnations on the other hand are offered if one's mother has died.


Butterfly Card

Things Needed

•    Construction paper
•    Hole punch
•    Scissorsbratio
•    Glue stick
•    Pencil
•    Markers or crayons
•    Optional: Glitter glue or glitter

Method

1. Fold two pieces of construction paper in half, making two card shapes.

2. Put the two folded cards together (one inside the other).

3. Along the fold of one of them, draw half a butterfly.

4. Keeping the two cards together, cut along the line you just drew. You will now have two butterflies.

5. On only one of the butterflies, fold it in half again and draw a smaller butterfly within it.

6. Cut along the line you just drew.

7. Using the hole punch, make a series of holes along the edges of the two pieces you just cut.
 
8. Glue one of these pieces onto the larger, uncut butterfly.

9. Flip the large butterfly over, and glue on the other cut piece.

10. Cut a black or brown body for your butterfly. Glue it onto the inside of your butterfly.

11. You now have a nice butterfly card. Write a message on your card.

12. Optional: Decorate your butterfly with crayons, markers, glitter glue, or glitter.

Mother's Day Recipe

Chocolate Chiffon Cake

 Ingredients:

•    1/2 Cup baking cocoa
•    2 Squares chocolate, unsweetened and melted
•    1-3/4 Cups cake flour
•    1-3/4 Cups sugar
•    1/3 Cup butter or margarine
•    1 tbsp Chopped nuts
•    7 Eggs, separated
•    1/2 Cup vegetable oil
•    3/4 Cup boiling water
•    2 tsp Vanilla extract
•    1-1/2 tsp Baking soda
•    1/4 tsp Cream of tartar
•    2 Cps confectioners' sugar
•    1-1/2 tsp Vanilla extract
•    1 tsp Salt
•    3 tbsp Hot water

Method:


1.    In a medium bowl, add cocoa and water until smooth; and allow it to cool for twenty minutes.
2.    In a mixing bowl, combine sugar, baking soda, flour and salt. Add vanilla, egg yolks, oil and cocoa mixture; beat until smooth and blends well.
3.    In a different mixing bowl, beat egg whites and 1/4 cream of tartar; now fold into egg yolk mixture.
4.    Pour into a tube pan and bake at 325 degrees F for an hour. Remove cake from the pan.
5.    For the purpose of icing, in a medium saucepan melt butter. After removing from the heat; stir in chocolate, sugar and vanilla.
6.    Make it sure to stir in enough water until desired consistency comes; drizzle over cake. Sprinkle with nuts.


04 May, 2010

Edenburgh's Hogmanay

The World's Best New Year Celebration

EDenburgh's Hogmanay 2010-2011,
Wednesday 29th December to Saturday 1st january

Edinburgh’s Hogmanay welcomed 2010 and the new decade in style, with over 200,000 revelers enjoying over 20 spectacular events throughout the festival. Now entering its 18th year, Edinburgh’s Hogmanay 2011 promises to be bigger and better than ever with a packed programme of events over the four day festival from Wednesday 29 December 2010 – Saturday 1 January 2011.

The world famous Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Street Party welcomes over 80,000 people from across the globe to party at the ‘Home of Hogmanay’, with live music stages, giant screens, light and laser shows and the spectacular Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Midnight Fireworks when over 4.5 tonnes of fireworks light up the Edinburgh sky in one of the world’s largest New Year displays.

The Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Street Party also features ticketed music events including the flagship Concert in the Gardens, set beneath the dramatic backdrop of Edinburgh Castle. Previous headliners include: Kasabian, Madness, Groove Armada, Scissor Sisters, Blondie, KT Tunstall and Calvin Harris.

Full programme details will be announced later in the year, register here for regular updates and event information.

Edinburgh’s Hogmanay would like to wish you all the very best for 2010 and will see you all for Edinburgh’s Hogmanay 2011!!!

CONCERT IN THE GARDENS

The music and fireworks spectacular
Friday 31 December
Stages live from 9pm – 1am
West Princes Street Gardens
Artist and tickets details for 2011 to be announced
Not recommended for under 16’s



The Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Concert in the Gardens is the music and fireworks spectacular which guarantees you see in the New Year in style. Set beneath the stunning backdrop of Edinburgh Castle, internationally acclaimed artists perform at the last gig of the year and the first of the New Year. Throw in the Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Midnight Fireworks which take place overhead from Edinburgh Castle and this is one of the most stunning New Year events in the world.

Previous Concert in the Gardens artists include:

Kasabian (with special guest Noel Gallagher)
Madness
Groove Armada
Calvin Harris
KT Tunstall
Blondie
Scissor Sisters
The Proclaimers



Tickets for Concert in the Gardens also grant access to the Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Street Party. No pass-outs permitted (i.e. leaving the arena and trying to gain re-entry). This is an all standing, outdoor event so please dress for the weather. There will be pay bar and food outlets within the event arena
  
Edinburgh's Hogmanay Street Party


Friday 31 December
Stages live from 9pm – 1am


Edinburgh City Centre
£10 administration fee per ticket (On-sale date to be announced)


The world famous Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Street Party is THE place to celebrate New Year. The original and best Hogmanay party presents a spectacular mix of live music stages, light and laser shows, 80,000 revellers, giant screens and the incredible Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Fireworks, which sees 4.5 tonnes of pyrotechnics light up the Edinburgh sky and signal the arrival of 2011.

Previous Street Party artists include:

The Enemy
MYLO
Glasvegas
Hard-Fi
Ocean Colour Scene
Ash
The Complete Stone Roses
Frightened Rabbit
The Cuban Brothers



Not recommended for under 16’s Tickets for Concert in the Gardens & The Keilidh also grant access to the Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Street Party. No pass-outs permitted, (i.e. leaving the arena and trying to gain re-entry). No entry after 11pm, so please come early! This is an outdoor event so please dress for the weather.




MIDNIGHT MOMENT

Friday 31 December
Midnight
Visible across the skies of Edinburgh



Edinburgh’s Hogmanay signals the arrival of 2011 in spectacular fashion as the world famous fireworks and laser display lights up the skies above Edinburgh from the Castle and Calton Hillen


As the bells strike midnight, join hands with 80,000 friends from all across the world in a mass Street Party rendition of Auld Lang Syne… all together now, ‘Should auld acquaintance be forgot….’


Useful information

The Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Fireworks are best seen from a distance so we recommend that you select a suitable vantage point.
Please do not approach the launch sites, which will be cordoned off.

Torchlight Procession

Wednesday 29 December
Free unticketed event


The opening event of Edinburgh’s Hogmanay 2011 is the spectacular Torchlight Procession. Join the famous Up Helly Aa’ Vikings from Shetland and thousands of torch carriers as they create a river of fire from the historic Royal Mile to the Son et Lumiére and fireworks finale on Calton Hill. To make sure you get a torch, purchase one in advance (details to follow).



Proceeds from the sale of torches go local charities.

Volt Festival


VOLT Festival 2010 - Sopron

One of the most exciting multicultural festivals in Central Europe, expecting its guests in the middle of a fabulous forest every July. Four days long, visitors are welcome with 15 stages and approximately 200 programs: concerts, DJs, theater shows and performances.

The festival is characterized by its wide variety of musical styles: rock, pop, jazz, hip-hop, electro, world music..

Sopron, the town hosting VOLT Festival lies at the Austrian-Hungarian border, 60 km from Vienna, 200 km from Budapest, 90 km from Bratislava. Apart from the festival, the historic town center of Sopron guarantees the tourists fadeless memories.

Although at the beginning of VOLT Festival in 1993 only 5 bands and 800 guests attended the event, nearly 70000 visitors arrived last year.

 Line-Up

VOLT festival line-up



Tickets

Day tickets available from EUR 30, Festival Passes from EUR 75. Current early booking ticket prices until May 30th are 10-20 EUR discounted compared to on site purchase.

Ticket Information
  
4 Day Festival Passes

The festival passes are valid for all 4 days of the festival. The visitor can stay inside the area of the event from the „0. day” 6 pm until the end of the event and use the camping facilities.
(Price on the site from 30th of June: 95€)
  
Day Tickets

The VOLT Day ticket entitles the visitor to enter the area of the event on the given day from 8 am until 5 am on the following day and to stay at the area of the event until 8 am on the following day. The VOLT Day Ticket during its validity bears the same rights as the VOLT 4 Day Festival Pass.
(Price on the site from 30th of June: 40€)
  
VOLT & Balaton Sound - Combined Passes

A combined pass gives you access to all 4 days of both festivals at a special price. You currently save 20€ compared to the normal festival passes.
(Price from 1st of June and on the site of VOLT Festival: 195€)
  
Tickets

current early booking prices for the VOLT Festival are only valid until May 31st.


Ticket
Price

VOLT - 4 Day Festival Pass
calc
USD98.00
GBP65.00
HUF20,505.00
PLN297.00
CHF107.00
75.00

VOLT - One Day Ticket 30.06.
calc
USD39.00
GBP26.00
HUF8,202.00
PLN119.00
CHF43.00
30.00

VOLT - One Day Ticket 01.07.
calc
USD39.00
GBP26.00
HUF8,202.00
PLN119.00
CHF43.00
30.00

VOLT - One Day Ticket 02.07.
calc
USD39.00
GBP26.00
HUF8,202.00
PLN119.00
CHF43.00
30.00

VOLT - One Day Ticket 03.07.
calc
USD39.00
GBP26.00
HUF8,202.00
PLN119.00
CHF43.00
30.00

VOLT & Balaton Sound - Combined Pass
calc
USD236.00
GBP155.00
HUF49,212.00
PLN713.00
CHF258.00
180.00
 
Performers of the previous years (1993-2009):

Marilyn Manson, Manu Chao, Franz Ferdinand, Limp Bizkit, Art Brut, Cypress Hill, Roni Size Reprazent, The Offspring, The Prodigy, Thievery Corporation, Korn, The Roots, The Cult, Pet Shop Boys, Tiga, Tosca, High Contrast, Marky & Stamina MC, Clawfinger, Rodney Hunter, Sergent Garcia, Nouvelle Vague, Stereo MC's, Fun Lovin' Criminals, US3, De-Phazz, Ozomatli, Kosheen, The Frank Popp Ensemble, Federico Aubele, Karl Bartos, Fort Knox Five, Koop, Laibach, Louie Austen, Parov Stelar, LTJ Bukem & MC Conrad, Adam Freeland, Roni Size & MC Dymanite, Doc Scott, Claude Young, DJ Krust & MC Dynamite, E-Z Rollers, Andy C, Dreadzone Sound System, Josh Wink, Anthony Rother, Coldcut, Dave Tipper, Pendulum, ...etc


Mardi Gras Festival

The Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Festival is the world’s premier gay and lesbian cultural festival.

The Festival spanned two weeks in 2010, from the 19th February – 6th March.You can get a flavour of Mardi Gras by visiting our Video & Photos section.

The highlight was as always the world-famous Mardi Gras Parade as well as some of the most famous dance parties in the gay calendar, including our iconic closing event Mardi Gras Party and extaordinarly picturesque Harbour '10.

The Festival officially launched at our enormous community picnic in the park, Fair Day. This sunny day kicked off two weeks with almost one hundred cultural, sporting and social events to appeal to every taste.

Just check out our Event Calendar to see what was on offer. Also have a look at the programme for the Mardi Gras Film Festival presented by Queerscreen.

One of the highlights of this year's Festival was the installations created by artist Spencer Tunick on March 1st. Spencer's signature use of large numbers of naked participants to create sublime and meaningful works provided a great chance for locals and visitors alike to get involved.

We had major international names such as Whitney Houston, John Waters, Paul Burston and Sarah Waters as well as the best in local talent. There was no shortage of great stage productions from the moving and challenging Bent to fun and exuberance with Frisky & Mannish's School of Pop and our musical theatre gala Hats Off!.

An exciting new event in 2010 was Queer Thinking which saw a fascinating range of artists, thinkers and academics gather to cover a truly eclectic range of topics, focused on this year's theme Mardi Gras' History of the World.

This year we also really focused on exploiting Sydney's natural beauty and attractions to ensure that both locals and visitors alike got the chance to enjoy the city together. It was possible to party all the way through Mardi Gras. Highlights included the new Parade Carnival, the Pool Party, Mardi Gras Dinner at Taronga Zoo, Mardi Gras Fag Tags Manly, the Drag Races at Bondi, the Lifesavers with Pride Beach BBQ at Tamarama and of course the official Mardi Gras Party After Party at Toybox Luna Park.

Our official Festival Bar was open every night through the Festival providing the perfect location for locals and visitors to meet someone new or bump into old friends.

More about our Festival

The New Mardi Gras Short Story Competition received some fantastic entries, each an interpretation of the 2010 competition theme, 'Making History'.

The story had to feature New Mardi Gras values, and while entrants did not need to identify as GLBTQ the story had to be GLBTQ themed.

Winners were announced at the Short Story Winners Night, held at the chic and stylish The Winery by Gazebo.

Queer Pixels Mardi Gras Video Competition

Queer Screen and New Mardi Gras received some brilliant entries for the 2010 Queer Pixels Competition.

Entries had to be no more than 3 minutes in length, come from anywhere in the world, and had to embody the spirit of Mardi Gras. Entrants were encouraged to draw inspiration from this year’s Queer Pixels theme ‘HiStory/HerStory’.

The best entries were screened along the Mardi Gras Parade route during the lead up to the Parade and be seen by hundreds of thousands of spectators.

The winning entry received the ultimate Mardi Gras package: a season pass to the Mardi Gras Film Festival, tickets to key Mardi Gras events including Mardi Gras Party and VIP Parade Viewing Area, plus an Australian Writers’ Guild membership.

Mardigras Tradition

The history of a Mardi Gras celebration existed many years before Europeans came to the New World. Some time in the Second Century, during mid-February (usually February 15 according to the Julian calendar), Ancient Romans would observe what they called the Lupercalia, a circus-type festival which was, in many respects, quite similar to the present day Mardi Gras. This festival honored the Roman deity, Lupercus, a pastoral God associated with Faunus or the Satyr. Although Lupercus is derived from the Latin Lupus (meaning "wolf"), the original meaning of the word as it applies to Roman religion has become obscured over the passage of time.

When Christianity arrived in Rome, the dignitaries of the early Church decided it would be more prudent to incorporate certain aspects of such rituals into the new faith rather than attempt to abolish them altogether. This granted a Christian interpretation to the ancient custom and the Carnival became a time of abandon and merriment which peceded the Lenten period (a symbolic Christian pentinence of 40 days commencing on Ash Wednesday and ending at Easter). During this time, there would be feasting which lasted several days and participants would indulge in voluntary madness by donning masks, clothing themselves in the likeness of spectres and generally giving themselves up to Bacchus and Venus. All aspects of pleasure were considered to be allowable during the Carnival celebration and today's modern festivites are thought by some to be more reminiscent of the Roman Saturnalia rather than Lupercalia, or be linked to even earlier Pagan festivals.

From Rome, the celebration spread to other European countries. In medieval times, a similar-type festivity to that of the present day Mardi Gras was given by monarchs and lords prior to Lent in order to ceremoniously conscript new knights into service and hold feasts in their honor. The landed gentry would also ride through the countryside rewarding peasants with cakes (thought by some to be the origin of the King Cake), coins (perhaps the origin of present day gifts of Mardi Gras doubloons) and other trinkets. In Germany, there still remains a Carnival similar to that of the one held in New Orleans. Known as Fasching, the celebrations begin on Twelfth Night and continue until Shrove Tuesday. To a lesser degree, this festivity is still celebrated in France and Spain. A Carnival season was also celebrated in England until the Nineteenth Century, originating as a type of "renewal" festival that incorporated fertility motifs and ball games which frequently turned into riots between opposing villages, followed by feasts of pancakes and the imbibing of alcohol. The preparing and consumption of pancakes on Shrove Tuesday (also known as "Pancake Day" or "Pancake Tuesday" and occurring annually between February 2 and March 9, depending upon the date of Easter) is a still a tradition in the United Kingdom, where pancake tossing and pancake races (during which a pancake must be tossed a certain number of times) are still popular. One of the most famous of such competitions, which takes place in Olney, Buckinghamshire, is said to date from 1445. It is a race for women only and for those who have lived in the Parish for at least three months. An apron and head-covering are requisite. The course is 415 yards and the pancake must be tossed at least three times during the race. The winner receives a kiss from the Ringer of the Pancake Bell and a prayer book from the local vicar. "Shrove" is derived from the Old English word "shrive," which means to "confess all sins."

It is generally accepted that Mardi Gras came to America in 1699 with the French explorer, Sieur d'Iberville. The festival had been celebrated as a major holiday in Paris since the Middle Ages. Iberville sailed into the Gulf of Mexico and, from there, launched an expedition along the Mississippi River. By March 3, 1699, Iberville had set up a camp on the West Bank of the River...about 60 miles South of the present day City of New Orleans in the State of Louisiana. Since that day was the very one on which Mardi Gras was being celebrated in France, Iberville named the site Point du Mardi Gras in honor of the festival. According to some sources, however, the Mardi Gras of New Orleans began in 1827 when a group of students who had recently returned from school in Paris donned strange costumes and danced their way through the streets. The students had first experienced this revelry while taking part in celebrations they had witnessed in Paris. In this version, it is said that the inhabitants of New Orleans were swiftly captured by the enthusiasm of the youths and quickly followed suit. Other sources maintain that the Mardi Gras celebration originated with the arrival of early French settlers to the State of Louisiana. Nevertheless, it is known that from 1827 to 1833, the New Orleans' Mardi Gras celebrations became more elaborate, culminating in an annual Mardi Gras Ball. Although the exact date of the first revelries cannot be determined, the Carnival was well-established by the middle of the Nineteenth Century when the Mystick Krewe of Comus presented its 1857 Torchlight Parade with a theme taken from "Paradise Lost" written by John Milton.

In French, "Mardi Gras" literally means "Fat Tuesday," so named because it falls on the day before Ash Wednesday, the last day prior to Lent...a 40-day season of prayer and fasting observed by the Roman Catholic Church (and many other Christian denominations) which ends on Easter Sunday. The origin of "Fat Tuesday" is believed to have come from the ancient Pagan custom of parading a fat ox through the town streets. Such Pagan holidays were filled with excessive eating, drinking and general bawdiness prior to a period of fasting. Since the modern day Carvinal Season is sandwiched between Christmas and Lent, with Christmas Day being December 25 on the Gregorian Calendar as set by the Roman Catholic Church, this means that other Holy Days are "floating" in nature. Easter always falls on a Sunday, but it can be any Sunday from March 23 through April 25, its actual date being the Sunday which follows the first Full Moon after the Spring Equinox. Mardi Gras is always 47 days prior to this alloted Sunday (the 40 days of Lent plus seven Sundays). The beginning of the Carnival Season itself, however, is also fixed...being January 6, which is the Feast of the Ephiphany, otherwise known as Little Christmas or Twelfth Night. Since the date of Mardi Gras thus varies, the length of the Carnival Season also varies accordingly from year-to-year. The origin of the word "Carvinal" is from the Latin for "farewell to the flesh," a time when one is expected to forego earthly pleasures prior to the restrictions of the Lenten Season, and is thought to be derived from the feasts of the Middle Ages known as carnis levamen or "solace of the flesh."

In 1833, Bernard Xavier de Marigny de Mandeville, a wealthy plantation owner, solicited a large amount of money in order to help finance an organized Mardi Gras celebration. It was not until 1837, however, that the first Mardi Gras Parade was staged. Two years later, a description of the 1839 Parade noted that it consisted of a single float. Nonetheless, it was considered to be a great success and apparently, the crowd roared hilariously as this somewhat crude float moved through the streets of the city. Since that time, Mardi Gras in New Orleans has been an overwhelming success, continuing to grow with additional organizations participating each year.

The traditional colors of Mardi Gras are purple (symbolic of justice), green (symbolic of faith) and gold (symbolic of power). The accepted story behind the original selection of these colors originates from 1872 when the Grand Duke Alexis Romanoff of Russia visited New Orleans. It is said that the Grand Duke came to the city in pursuit of an actress named Lydia Thompson. During his stay, he was given the honor of selecting the official Mardi Gras colors by the Krewe of Rex...thus, did these colors also become the colors of the House of Romanoff. The 1892 Rex Parade theme ("Symbolism of Colors") first gave meaning to the representation of the official Mardi Gras colors. Interestingly, the colors of Mardi Gras influenced the choice of school colors for the Lousiana arch-rival colleges, Louisiana State University and Tulane University. Whe LSU was deciding on its colors, the stores in New Orleans had stocked-up on fabrics of purple, green and gold for the upcoming Mardi Gras Season. LSU, opting for purple and gold, bought a large quantity of the available cloth. Tulane purchased much of the only remaining color...green (Tulane's colors are green and white).

Today, Louisiana's Mardi Gras is celebrated not only in New Orleans, but also in numerous smaller cities and towns around the State and in the neighboring Gulf Coast Region. Similar celebrations are also held in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro...arguably the world's most elaborate Carnival location with its Samba Dromo parades, which annually attract a huge number of tourists from all corners of the globe. Regardless of where the festivals take place, however, all share a common party atmosphere inherently associated with the celebrations.


Things2DoSpain-The best festival in Spain

In Spain, the calendar year is a kaleidoscope of celebration, a constant whirl of dancing, drinking, and devotion. There are festivals to honor saints, bulls, horses, flowers, grapes, and shellfish. There are symphony orchestras and blaring local bands, dancers in ballet slippers and on stilts, and evenings lit by chandeliers or fireworks.

The festivals provide a chance for young Spanish men to show off their skillsand the original machismoin climbing poles, wrestling bulls, or standing on each other's shoulders to form Catalonia's six-story castellers, or human towers. Each festival bears the trademark of its town, like the stomp, strum, clap, and yodel of Granada's Festival IntemacionaL de Musica y Danza (International Festival of Music and Dance) or the flowers and frills of Seville's Feria de Abril (April Fair).

Most festivals coincide with Catholic holidays, Camava Fiesta de Corpus Christl, and Semana Santa (Holy Week, the week before Easter) are celebrated everywhere but many still show traces of their pagan roots - the Hogueres de San Joan (St. John's Bonfires, celebrated in Alicante) mark the summer solstice. For a complete listing of events, contact the National Tourist Office of Spain.

A word of caution to those planning to hurl themselves into the merriment at one of Spain's frothiest celebrations: Crowds are very much a part of most festivals, so be prepared for crowded hotels, crowded restaurants, crowded streets, and crowded auditoriums. Advance planning will mitigate much of the discomfort so reserve rooms ahead of time but it's still necessary to be prepared mentally for being jostled, for waiting in line, and more for a can of warm cola all part and parcel of festival going.

For details on the most important festivals in Spain's major cities, including Pamplona's Fiesta de San Fermin; Semana Santa and Feria de Abril in Seville; Valencia's Les Falles de Sant Josep (Feast of St. Joseph celebration); and the Festa do ApostoL (Feast of St. James the Apostle) in Santiago de Compostela, visit the tourist office in Spain.

The Mystery of Elche Alicante Spain

The residents of Elche have been staging this religious dramaa celebration of the Assumption of the Virgin for more than six centuries, making it the world's longest. running play. Performances take place in the 17th century Iglesia de Santa Marfa (Church of St. Mary). While the songs feature an ancient dialect akin to Catalan, the action is actually fairly easy to follow, especially with the added benefit of breathtaking special effects (the descent of the angels from the church's lofty blue dome is a definite emotional highlight), Admission is free though competition for seats is keen.

The El Rocio Pilgrimage Spain

Pilgrims pour through the fields and olive groves of Andalusia in a slow stream of flower-festooned horses and beribboned oxen, converging on the rural sanctuary of EI Rocio, 40 miles (64 km) from Seville.

As in the grand finale of a Broadway musical, the white covered wagons and little surreys with a fringe on top trundle westward, flanked by extras in wide-brimmed hats and brightly colored, flouncy skirts, dancing to the music of flutes and tambourines. The festival mixes equal parts of fervor and fun. Pilgrims march silently at night over the candlelit marshes, then break out into foot-stomping, finger-snapping seguidillas. The climax comes with the parading of the statue of the Virgen del Rocio, hoisted on the shoulders of the faithful in a brilliant scene painted in sun, sweat, and tears.

The Horse Fair Jerez de la Frontera Andalusia

Jerez is famous for sherry and horses, and even has a museum devoted to both, but during May's Feria de Caballo, the steeds steal the show. Straightbacked riders in felt hats and embroidered uniforms canter through the streets, and carriage drivers guide harnessed teams through the myriad maneuvers of dressage.

All around the city, horses jump, trot, whinny, rear, gallop, spar with bulls, or simply stand still to be admired. The preening white Cartujanos with cottony manes are the graceful stars, descended from the horses the Moors rode during their conquest of Spain, and bred through the centuries in Andalusia. The fair is still faithful to its 13th-century origins as a livestock market; you may have come for the costumes, parades, and bullfights that are part of any Spanish festival, but if in a Walter Mitty life you ever cast yourself as a cowboy, or if you have a weakness for gambling, you just might ride away on your own, newly purchased, horse.

Santa Cruz Carnival Tenerife Canary Islands

Rooted in an ancient pagan rite, and mixed with the apocalyptic Catholic bingeing before the severity of Lent, this carnival has the flavor of a Spanish Halloween. It is celebrated for 12 days in February throughout Spain, but nowhere more extravagantly than on the island of Tenerife, where tradition melds with a Greenwich Village sense of fashion to produce wild parades and costumes that would have made Liberace look staid.

It is an orgy of purple make up, leopardskin leotards, sequined hats,
masks, feathers, capes, and wigs. Ornate carts function as mobile bandstands, stages, and puppet theaters, and the air is filled with strums and songs and wheezing clarinets.

Semana Santa in Castile La Mancha

This celebration froths over the sides of its cliff, leaving a frozen dribble of houses hanging in the gorge above the Rio Huecar (Huecar River). During Semana Santa (Holy Week), which leads up to Domingo de La Resurreccion (Easter Sunday), trumpets echo between the sheer, rock walls eerie calls from the Middle Ages to the modern world below. Above, austere processions, silent except for the solemn fanfares, wind slowly through the narrow alleys. Penitents carry sculpted and painted scenes from the Passion story, and members of religious brotherhoods (cofradas) march together in the forbidding robes and pointed hoods of the Spanish Inquisition.

A rowdy procession of Los borrachos (the drunkards), accompanied by drum rolls, is well attended by the local youth. Each evening, in a new auditorium built into the cliff, orchestras and choirs from all over Europe perform recitals of religious music ranging from somber motets to Wagner's mystical Tannhiiuser. Every year, a new work commissioned for the festival is played here for the first time.
 
Sacred Spain

All over Spain, every invasion, migration, and wave of conversion left its signature in stone, much of which has been all but erased by time and the furor of the Reconquest. As generations of Catholics poked at the hegemony of the Moors, finally pushing them back into North Africa in 1492, they destroyed mosques and erected huge cathedrals in their place. And despite the recently named calles de la juderfa (streets of the old Jewish quarter) that crop up in medieval neighborhoods, the statues of Maimonides, and the Star of David pendants for sale in trinket stores, not many traces remain of the thousands of Jews who, until their expulsion or forcible conversion that began in 1492, lived in Spain for centuries alongside Phoenicians, Romans, Visigoths, Berbers, Arabs, and Christians.


Habitat Film Festival

Habitat Film Festival 2010, May 2 - 9 at Habitat World, IHC

Impressing film lovers across the city for over a decade, the Habitat Film Club brings to its Delhi audiences previous year's best and critically acclaimed pan-Indian films with the fifth annual Habitat Film Festival. Scheduled from May 2 - 9, 2010, it is the only festival which honours and pays tribute to the contribution of regional Indian directors to our cinematic culture. This year, we are delighted to hold retrospective of films edited by Award Winning Editor, Sreekar Prasad. The Habitat Film Festival has emerged in the short years since its inception as one of the foremost festivals of Indian Cinema. As Mr. Shyam Benegal noted appreciatively when he inaugurated the first Habitat Film Festival in 2006, this was a much needed niche, dedicated to Pan Indian cinema, in the melee of International, Asian, E.U. and Regional Film Festivals. Indeed the Habitat Film Festival, with its selection of the best, award winning and critically acclaimed films of the preceding year, is today arguably the foremost showcase of Indian cinema. 

This year, we are privileged to have renowned director Shaji M. Karun as the Guest of Honour inaugurating the festival. It will feature some of the best films by award winning editor, Sreekar Prasad including Mani Ratnam's Yuva, Shaji N. Karun's Kutty Srank, Santosh Sivan's Terrorist, Nandita Das's Firaaq and the much recent Antaheen by Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury to name a few. The festival will also feature the AIDS JAAGO Series - short films by Mira Nair, Vishal Bharadwaj, Santosh Sivan & Farhan Akhtar. Another highlight of the festival is the daily 'Face-to-Face' with directors of the days' films, giving cinema lovers an opportunity of a focused interaction and Q&A. 

The festival begins with a musical performance by Gokul Bhaskar, Sreekumar & Khalid of Asima,
he iconoclastic male choir and percussion ensemble from Kerala, composed and directed by Devissaro. This is the first time that they will be performing in Delhi. Speaking on the occasion, Vidyun Singh, Director - Programmes, Old World Hospitality says, "The Habitat Film Festival adds an enriching experience to the summer season. It has grown from strength to strength and is an eagerly awaited event, not just for audiences but the film fraternity as well. This year, the Festival does a Retrospective of films edited by Sreekar Prasad, for his continued contribution to regional films. His works have engaged and enthralled audiences for decades and this festival brings together a package of the finest."

Highlights of the Festival: 

May 2, 6:00pm: Inauguration by Shaji N. Karun, Award Winning Director Guest of Honour: Sreekar Prasad Performance by Gokul Bhaskar, Sreeku mar & Khalid of Asima ­­­­­­Daily
  
'Face-to-Face' with Directors Retrospective of Award Winning Editor Sreekar Prasad Habitat Festival 2010 Schedule 2nd May 11:00am: Pokkisham (Tamil/2009/140mins) Dir. Cheran
2:30pm: Documentary film | AIDS JAAGO Series - Migration (Hindi with English subtitles/18mins) Dir. Mira Nair

2:50pm: Raag Biraag (Assamese/1996) Dir. Bidyut Chakrabarty

6:00pm: Inauguration by Shaji N. Karun, Award Winning Director; Guest of Honour: Sreekar Prasad; Performance by Gokul Bhaskar, Sreekumar & Khalid of Asima
6:30pm: Kutty Srank (Malayalam/2009/127mins) Dir. Shaji N. Karun

8:30pm: Yuva (Hindi/2004/161mins) Dir. Mani Ratnam 

3rdMay 6:30pm: Sontha Vooru (Telugu/2009/120mins) Dir. P. Sunil Kumar Reddy
 
8:30pm: Terrorist (Tamil/1999/95mins) Dir. Santosh Sivan 4th May 

6:30pm: Documentary film Choti SI Asa (Hindi/30mins) Dir. Usha Albuquerque
 
7:00pm: Paltadcho Manis (Konkani/2009/96mins) Dir. Laxmikant Shetgaonkar
 
8:30pm: Ek Cup Chya (Marathi/2009/120mins) Dirs. Sumitra Bhave & Sunil Sukthankar5th May 6:30pm: Basundhara (Assamese/2009/117mins) Dir. Hiren Bora
 
8:30pm: Angshumaner Chobi (Bengali/2009/140mins) Dir. Atanu Ghosh 6th May 

6:30pm: Road To Sangam (Hindi/2010/120mins) Dir. Amit Railm_fe
 
8:30pm: Janma (Marathi/2009/115mins) Dir. Shirish Rane
 
7th May 6:30pm: Mukha Puta (Kannada/2009/112mins) Dir. Roopa Iyer

8:30pm: MadhyaVenal (Malayalam/2009/122mins) Dir. Madhu Kaithapram  

8th MayVimukti (Kannada/2008/110mins) Dir. P. Sheshadri
 
2:30pm: Documentary film AIDS JAAGO Series - Blood Brothers (Hindi with English subtitles/18mins) Dir.Vishal Bhardwaj
 
2:50pm: Haat: The Weekly Bazar (Rajasthani/2009/103mins) Dir. Seema Kapoor
 
6:30pm: Kadaksham (Malayalam/2010/120mins) Dir. Sashi Paravoor
 
8:30pm: Phir Kabhi (Hindi/2009/145mins)Dir. V. K. Prakash  

9th May 11:00am: Documentary film AIDS JAAGO Series - Positive (Hindi with English subtitles/18mins) Dir. Farhan Akhtar

11:20am: Patham
Nilayile Theevandi
(Malayalam/2009/102mins) Dir. Joshy Mathew 
11:00am:

2:30pm: Documentary film AIDS JAAGO Series - Prarambha (Tamil with English subtitles/13mins) Dir. Santosh Sivan
 
2:45pm: Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya (Tamil/2010/156mins) Dir. Gautham Vasudev Menon
 
6:30pm: Antaheen (Bengali/2009/120mins) Dir. Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury
 
8:30pm: Firaaq (Hindi/2009/100mins) Dir. Nandita Das Passes to the films are available at the Programme Desk at Habitat World, IHC from 10:00am - 7:00pm. Notes to EditorAbout 

Habitat Film Club The Habitat Film Club was started in March 2000. In a short span since inception, it is today one of the most dynamic Film Clubs in the country. The Habitat Film Club won the 6th Pritiman Sarkar Memorial Award for the Best Film Society in Northern India for the year 2002-2003. 

The Habitat Film Club partners numerous Embassies and High Commissions in order to bring a pick of the best of World Cinema to its members. Some of our recent international film collaborations have been with the Embassies of Spain, Israel, France, Italy and Germany. Celebrating the achievements and landmarks of Indian cinema has been a distinctive highlight of the Habitat Film Club. Members have enjoyed retrospectives and interactions with industry legends from Ritwick Ghatak, Gulzar, Shyam Benegal, Amitabh Bachchan, Mani Ratnam, Shabana Azmi, Naseeruddin Shah to Rituparno Ghosh, Nagesh Kukunoor, Tanuja and Deepti Naval. A vibrant and stimulating Film Forum, the Habitat Film Club has an active Film Discussion Group and holds annual Film Appreciation Courses.Read more on IndiaPRwire.com

  

03 May, 2010

Ka Pomblang Nongkrem


Ka Pomblang Nongkrem or Shad Nongkrem is the most important and elaborate festival of the Khasis. This five day long colourful festival, is held annually in November at Smit, the capital of the Khyrem Syiemship near Shillong for thanksgiving to the Goddess Ka Blei Synshar for a rich harvest and prosperity of the people.

An important part of this festival is Pomblang (decapitation of goats) Ceremony, at which goats are sacrificed and offerings are made to the ancestor and ancestress of the ruling clan and the deity of Shillong peak (U-Lei Shillong). A sanctification ceremony of the Tangmuri (pipes) as queen of the musical instruments, form part of the ritual.


After the religious rituals, on the fourth day, Khasi men and women, dressed in traditional splendour, perform the famous Nongkrem dance.

For the Nongkrem dance, young lads brilliantly clad in colourful silk dhotis, coat and a plumed turban, adorning glittering ornaments dance around with a sword or spear in one hand and usually a white Yak hair whisk in their left hand, keeping time to the changing beats of drums and playing of the Tangmuri (pipes). Pretty maidens in magnificent silk-robes and elaborately decked in priceless intricately designed ornaments of gold and silver and wearing a silver crown move in an inner circle in two's and three's in tiny steps while the lads form a protective ring around them flashing their weapons. The men's dancing is more vigorous and energetic. The festival ends on the Fifth day with the ' Syiem' offering a prayer of thanks giving to the Creator.

Kalpathi Ratholsavam

Kalpathi Ratholsavam, also called as Kalpathi Chariot Festival is an annual Hindu Festival celebrated mainly in the Kalpathi village in the state of Kerala. The festival is celebrated at the Sri Visalakshi Sametha Sri Viswanatha Swamy temple dedicated towards Lord Shiva and Goddess Lakshmi.

The Chariot Festival is celebrated every year in the month of November. It is a ten day event. Over the years the festival celebrations have gained immense popularity in the state of Kerala.

The celebrations at the festival includes Vedic recitals and cultural programs for the first four days and through the last three days Chariots for the Lord are decorated by devotees. Devotees from all across India gather here during the Festival.

According t the Legends the Festival is traced to be about 700 years old. The temple of Sri Visalakshi Sametha Sri Viswanatha Swamy dates back to 1425 A.D. The temple is known to be the oldest Siva temple in Malabar. It is situated at the Southern bank of river Neela Bhagirathi.

The annual Chariot Festival is a tribute to the Indian culture and traditions that has been well preserved by the people of Kerala. The Festival is a must watch spectacle, and even the weather of the place during the time of Festival is absolutely favorable.

How to Reach?
  • Nearest town: Palakkad - 3 km
  • Nearest railway station: Olavakot - 1 km
  • Nearest airport: Coimbatore - 55 km